Park Avenue princesses in Morazán Province this week were classified as expendable assets.
Diego Garcia might trust her to deliver his payoff, but Smith didnât trust Diego Garcia, or Alejandro Campos, or the CIA, and as of two hours ago, White Rook was at the top of his âsketchyâ list.
Outside the hangar, he heard the familiar drone of a C-130 approaching, which did absolutely nothing to improve his mood. The Air Force loadmaster finished checking the pallet, then walked over and pressed a switch on the hangar wall. Two twenty-foot-high doors began sliding apart on greased rails, revealing the transport aircraft with its aft end facing the hangar, and its ramp coming down. In short order, a fork-lift operator was moving the pallet onto the ramp.
Ready or not, he thought, and the answer to that was ânot.â
A serious-looking young man wearing tropical BDUs stepped off the airplaneâs ramp and headed inside the hangar, approaching him and Honey. The soldierâs uniform was completely devoid of unit insignia or any other identificationâone more sign that Smith and Honey were heading into no-manâs-land.
âIâm Smith,â the young soldier said with a quick wink.
âYeah, so am I,â Smith admitted, grinning in spite of himself and the whole rotten situation.
âTwo to Ilopango,â the soldier continued. âTransload and handoff to Salvadoran army at hangar T-195, correct?â
âThatâs us,â Rydell confirmed. âI need a set of BDUs for my civilian package. Do you have anything thatâll even come close to fitting her?â
âYes, sir,â the soldier said, his gaze flicking over Honey before returning directly to Smith. âWe were warned of a civilian VIP, female, short, size four with size five shoes.â
Short. Smithâs grin widened. He couldnât imagine she liked that.
âWeâre setting up a dressing screen now.â The younger man continued, pointing to the right of the doors, where another member of the aircrew was busy rigging a poncho with some suspension line. âThe uniform and a pair of boots will be behind the screen.â
Smith nodded, then shifted his attention back to the pallet being winched aboard the C-130. Yes, sir, he was going to be wondering for a long time what the CIA had promised the Salvadoran government in order to get their cooperation on a load of weapons being delivered to the CNL.
Talk about politics and bedfellows. That kind of information either never showed up anywhere, ever, or someday, some headline would catch his eye, and heâd think, âSo that was what that was all about.â It had happened to him a couple of times, but he couldnât say heâd ever gotten any satisfaction out of it. The CIA ran their own game, their own way, and anybody and everybody was grist for their mill.
âYour cargo will be secure in ten more minutes,â the soldier said. âI need you on board as soon as possible after that, since we have runway priority. Wheels up in fifteen.â
âWeâll be ready and standing by, inside the left edge of the door,â Smith said. âIt would be nice if the aircrew could help us give the other passenger some visual screening between the hangar and the ramp.â
The soldier gave Honey another brief glance and returned his attention to Smith, again without a single expression crossing his faceâpure professional, all the way.
âAlready arranged,â he said. âSee you in a few.â
âBDUs?â she asked, as soon as the younger man had walked away.
âBattle Dress Uniform, a camouflage shirt and trousers, cotton twill. Youâll be glad youâre wearing them,â he said, immediately launching into the hard sell in order to avoid an argument they didnât have time to have. âTheyâll be warmer and more comfortable on the plane, and less
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